Depression from preschool to adolescence - five faces of stability.
Ida Sund MorkenKristine Rensvik ViddalBror RanumLars WichstrømPublished in: Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines (2020)
Across childhood, while most symptoms of MDD and dysthymia become more frequent, they are equally important. The transition to adolescence is a particularly vulnerable period: The depression construct becomes more coherent, stability increases, the level of depression increases, and such an increase predicts further escalation. Even so, intervention at any time during childhood may have lasting effects on reducing child and adolescent depression.